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1 2 Plasma Membrane Phospholipids Fatty acid Phosphate “repelled by water” “attracted to water”

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Presentation on theme: "1 2 Plasma Membrane Phospholipids Fatty acid Phosphate “repelled by water” “attracted to water”"— Presentation transcript:

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2 1

3 2 Plasma Membrane

4 Phospholipids Fatty acid Phosphate “repelled by water” “attracted to water”

5 4 Hydrophilic head Hydrophobic tail WATER Phospholipid Bilayer

6 Membrane is a collage of proteins & other molecules embedded in the fluid matrix of the lipid bilayer Extracellular fluid Cholesterol Cytoplasm Glycolipid Transmembrane proteins Filaments of cytoskeleton Peripheral protein Glycoprotein Phospholipids 1972, S.J. Singer & G. Nicolson proposed Fluid Mosaic Model

7 6 Fluid Mosaic Model

8 7 fracture plane often follows the hydrophobic interior of a membrane two separated layers membrane proteins go wholly with one of the layers A cell is frozen and fractured with a knife. The fracture plane often follows the hydrophobic interior of a membrane, splitting the phospholipid bilayer into two separated layers. The membrane proteins go wholly with one of the layers.

9 8 The Fluidity of Membranes Lateral movement (~10 7 times per second) Flip-flop (~ once per month)

10 9 FluidViscous Unsaturated hydrocarbon tails with kinks Saturated hydro- Carbon tails The Fluidity of Membranes

11 10 The Fluidity of Membranes Figure 7.5 Cholesterol

12 11 Membrane Proteins and Their Functions Fibers of extracellular matrix (ECM)

13 Polar areas of protein Nonpolar areas of protein 12 Types of Membrane Proteins

14 NH 2 H+H+ COOH Cytoplasm Retinal chromophore Nonpolar (hydrophobic)  -helices in the cell membrane H+H+ Porin monomer  -pleated sheets Bacterial outer membrane proton pump channel in photosynthetic bacteria aquaporin = water channel in bacteria function through conformational change = protein changes shape H2OH2O H2OH2O H+H+ H+H+

15 14 Types of Membrane Proteins

16 15 Figure 7.9 Transport. (left) A protein that spans the membrane may provide a hydrophilic channel across the membrane that is selective for a particular solute. (right) Other transport proteins shuttle a substance from one side to the other by changing shape. Some of these proteins hydrolyze ATP as an energy source to actively pump substances across the membrane. Enzymatic activity. A protein built into the membrane may be an enzyme with its active site exposed to substances in the adjacent solution. In some cases, several enzymes in a membrane are organized as a team that carries out sequential steps of a metabolic pathway. Signal transduction. A membrane protein may have a binding site with a specific shape that fits the shape of a chemical messenger, such as a hormone. The external messenger (signal) may cause a conformational change in the protein (receptor) that relays the message to the inside of the cell. (a) (b) (c) ATP Enzymes Signal Receptor

17 16 Cell-cell recognition. Some glyco-proteins serve as identification tags that are specifically recognized by other cells. Intercellular joining. Membrane proteins of adjacent cells may hook together in various kinds of junctions, such as gap junctions or tight junctions Attachment to the cytoskeleton and extracellular matrix (ECM). Microfilaments or other elements of the cytoskeleton may be bonded to membrane proteins, a function that helps maintain cell shape and stabilizes the location of certain membrane proteins. Proteins that adhere to the ECM can coordinate extracellular and intracellular changes (d) (e) (f) Glyco- protein

18 17 The Role of Membrane Carbohydrates in Cell-Cell Recognition “Antigen”

19 18 Synthesis and Sidedness of Membranes

20 19 ER

21 20 Membrane Permeability

22 polar hydrophilic heads nonpolar hydrophobic tails polar hydrophilic heads H2OH2O sugar lipids salt waste impermeable to polar molecules

23 22 Permeability of the Lipid Bilayer

24 23 Transport Proteins

25 24 Passive Transport

26 25 Diffusion  movement from HIGH  LOW concentration Diffusion  movement from HIGH  LOW concentration

27 26 Effects of Osmosis on Water Balance

28 27 Water Balance of Cells Without Walls freshwater No problem, here KABOOM!

29 28 Three States of Tonicity

30 29 Isotonic Solutions

31 30 Hypertonic Solution

32 31 Hypotonic Solutions

33 32 isotonic Animal cell. An animal cell fares best in an isotonic environment unless it has special adaptations to offset the osmotic uptake or loss of water.

34 33 Water Balance of Cells with Walls

35 34 turgid (firm hypotonic environment Plant cell. Plant cells are turgid (firm) and generally healthiest in a hypotonic environment, where the uptake of water is eventually balanced by the elastic wall pushing back on the cell.

36 Cell (compared to beaker)  hypertonic or hypotonic Beaker (compared to cell)  hypertonic or hypotonic Which way does the water flow?  in or out of cell.05 M.03 M

37 36 no net movement of water There will be no net movement of water since the concentration of solute in each solution is equal

38 37 There will be a net movement of water from Solution B to Solution A until both solutions have equal concentrations of solute

39 38 Each molecule of NaCl will dissociate to form a Na+ ion and a Cl- ion, making the final concentration of solutes 200 molecules per mil. Therefore, there will be a net movement of water from Solution A to Solution B until both solutions have equal concentrations of solute

40 39 Facilitated Diffusion open channel = fast transport facilitated = with help HIGH LOW

41 40 EXTRACELLULAR FLUID Channel protein Solute CYTOPLASM A channel protein (purple) has a channel through which water molecules or a specific solute can pass.

42 41 carrier proteinalternates between two conformations can transport the solute in either direction down the concentration gradient A carrier protein alternates between two conformations, moving a solute across the membrane as the shape of the protein changes. The protein can transport the solute in either direction, with the net movement being down the concentration gradient of the solute.

43 42 Active Transport conformational change LOW HIGH ATP

44 43 P P i EXTRACELLULAR FLUID Na+ binding stimulates phosphorylation by ATP. 2 Na + Cytoplasmic Na + binds to the sodium-potassium pump. 1 K + is released and Na + sites are receptive again; the cycle repeats. 3 Phosphorylation causes the protein to change its conformation, expelling Na + to the outside. 4 Extracellular K + binds to the protein, triggering release of the Phosphate group. 6 Loss of the phosphate restores the protein’s original conformation. 5 CYTOPLASM [Na + ] low [K + ] high Na + P ATP Na + P ADP K+K+ K+K+ K+K+ K+K+ K+K+ K+K+ [Na + ] high [K + ] low

45 44 Passive transport. Substances diffuse spontaneously down their concentration gradients, crossing a membrane with no expenditure of energy by the cell. The rate of diffusion can be greatly increased by transport proteins in the membrane. Active transport. Some transport proteins act as pumps, moving substances across a membrane against their concentration gradients. Energy for this work is usually supplied by ATP. Diffusion. Hydrophobic molecules and (at a slow rate) very small uncharged polar molecules can diffuse through the lipid bilayer. Facilitated diffusion. Many hydrophilic substances diffuse through membranes with the assistance of transport proteins, either channel or carrier proteins. ATP

46 45 Maintenance of Membrane Potential by Ion Pumps

47 46 Proton Pump EXTRACELLULAR FLUID + H+H+ H+H+ H+H+ H+H+ H+H+ H+H+ Proton pump ATP CYTOPLASM + + + + – – – – – +

48 47 Cotransport

49 48

50 49 Bulk Transport

51 50 Exocytosis & Endocytosis exocytosis

52 phagocytosis pinocytosis receptor-mediated endocytosis fuse with lysosome for digestion non-specific process triggered by molecular signal

53 52 phagocytosis In phagocytosis, a cell engulfs a particle by Wrapping pseudopodia around it and packaging it within a membrane- enclosed sac large enough to be classified vacuole as a vacuole. The particle is digested after the vacuole fuses with a lysosome containing hydrolytic enzymes. PHAGOCYTOSIS pinocytosis In pinocytosis, the cell “gulps” droplets of extracellular fluid extracellular fluid into tiny vesicles. It is not the fluid itself that is needed by the cell, but the molecules dissolved in the droplet. Because any and all included solutes are taken into the cell, pinocytosis is nonspecific in the substances it transports.

54 53 0.25 µm RECEPTOR-MEDIATED ENDOCYTOSIS Receptor Ligand Coat protein Coated pit Coated vesicle A coated pit and a coated vesicle formed during receptor- mediated endocytosis (TEMs). Plasma membrane Coat protein Receptor-mediated endocytosis enables the cell to acquire bulk quantities of specific substances, even though those substances may not be very concentrated in the extracellular fluid. Embedded in the membrane are proteins with specific receptor sites exposed to the extracellular fluid. The receptor proteins are usually already clustered in regions of the membrane called coated pits, which are lined on their cytoplasmic side by a fuzzy layer of coat proteins. Extracellular substances (ligands) bind to these receptors. When binding occurs, the coated pit forms a vesicle containing the ligand molecules. Notice that there are relatively more bound molecules (purple) inside the vesicle, other molecules (green) are also present. After this ingested material is liberated from the vesicle, the receptors are recycled to the plasma membrane by the same vesicle.


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